Transcript: Rick Barnes Availability Previewing Ole Miss

Transcript: Rick Barnes Availability Previewing Ole Miss

Vols HC Rick Barnes / Credit: UT Athletics

Tennessee basketball coach Rick Barnes met with the media via Zoom on Monday to review UT’s win over Kansas and preview the upcoming matchup with Ole Miss.

On if it is concerning that the team had opposite performances in the games against Florida and Kansas:
“Well, I think you’re always concerned when you don’t do the things that you feel like you’re capable of. I also know this—that old saying in coaching—you’re never as good as you think you are and you’re probably never as bad as you think you are. We’re somewhere in the middle probably. To answer that is the word consistency. Can we get consistent with it? Again, when we’ve had everybody healthy, I think we’ve been better. I don’t think there’s any question about that. Even with that said, I think that we are a good enough team that we shouldn’t get beat as badly as we did at Florida. So much of the game is mental and you can get rocked back a little bit, and sometimes it takes you longer to get out of it. We cost ourselves in games because we would not shoot the ball, and that led to a lot of turnovers. Like I said here against Mississippi State the other night when I was talking about kind of the same situation that you’ve asked me about, we finally started shooting the ball. They didn’t go in, but then the challenge was would we continue to shoot open shots. We did that other night against Kansas, and I would be very disappointed—I will tell you this, too. Yesterday during film, I got onto Santi (Vescovi) about turning down some shots that he’s got to take for us. The key going forward will be if we do that, I think it takes a lot of pressure off. You’re not going to make them all. Nobody makes them all against us and we’re not going to make them all, but I think we’re all looking for consistency from everybody. I think that discrepancy—I can’t tell you why it’s like that other than I know that it gets back to consistency.”

On what a ‘Come to Jesus’ meeting looks like with him:
“I would like to think that our players know that we’re going to be truthful and that we’re going to coach them the way that we want them to be coached. We’re going to watch film. We’re not going to hold back. Every game we show them the good, the bad, and the ugly. I think sometimes you’ve got to go deeper than that. Sometimes you revert back to experiences you’ve dealt with in the past. Coaching is an everyday proposition. You can’t ever think you’re there. Instead, you get up every day with the mindset ‘How can we get better?’ Knowing that this is what I do for a living, the guys that I coach want to do it for a living, but they have no idea what goes into that. I do believe if you take days off trying to coach them and help them, it hurts them in the long run. The biggest thing that you can do, and I think our players will tell you, is that I am brutally honest. Sometimes the truth hurts when you see it, but I’m not going to say anything to them that I can’t validate with the tape in terms of their effort and in terms of them not playing the way we need to play. I can point it out to them, but that tape validates it. In the past I’ve said I can arrest them, but the tape charges them. I think as a staff we’re very straight forward with them. The most important thing in life is truth, and I think as long as you’re speaking truth, you’re going to be fine.”

On how to balance wanting to play well now versus wanting to peak at the end of the season:
“We showed yesterday, and just like you would expect in the game the other night against Kansas, we did not execute particularly well to start the game, which I wasn’t surprised because we had two freshmen out there that haven’t been in that situation. If I said it once yesterday, I said it ten times, we’ve got room to get so much better. I don’t think we’re anywhere near peaking right now. It’s still about us getting better. It’s about certain guys still learning the offense, understanding what they need to do, spacing wise. We can get so much better. Defensively the other night I thought we were really good. Where we’ve got to get consistent is offensively. I’m not talking about making shots. When you’re making shots like we did at the start of the game, it made everything look pretty. From a technical standpoint, that’s what it was. We made shots. Once the game settled down, we got back into where we were executing what we wanted to get done.”

On what ‘drawing the line’ means to the team and how is that something they accomplished:
“It was about us. The line had nothing to do with anybody but us. The night before we talked about the things that we had to do within our own team. This group of guys, they love each other, they care about each other, but it’s about the respect level within our team in terms of guys doing their jobs night in and night out, and excepting the role that we need them to play. A lot of it was directed towards rebounding the basketball. We had gotten our tails kicked in rebounding. Whether you want to call it toughness or technique, the fact is it’s a mindset. We said we’re going to draw the line. We’ve talked, and everybody says you just have to do it. Whether you’re talking about–whatever it takes is what it gets down to. Block your man out and go get the ball. We’ve got to go rebound. Drawing the line, what we’re referring to is in our own team structure in terms of proving to ourselves that we were tough enough to do it and capable of doing it.”

On his early impressions of Ole Miss:
“Well, obviously they have a whole new team from a year ago. With Kermit and his teams—you go back to the beginning of the year they, have been playing great basketball. They are aggressive, they trap, they really work hard at turning you over and they do a terrific job of getting turnovers, and turning those turnovers into baskets. They are very active defensively and I really like the way they run their offense with speed. So, every night we go out, it’s a different opponent, but yet we have to have to same mindset in terms of playing against teams that are very well coached and they know what they’re looking for. He’s going to have them ready to play, and he always has his teams ready to play. We’ve got to be ready to step up and show that we can be consistent.”

On how fine the line is between the extra pass, passing up a good shot for a better shot, and taking the open shots he’s been talking about recently…
“The fine line between shooting the ball and extra pass is obviously important. We want as many uncontested shots as we can get. What you don’t want is an extra pass with a really good shooter that has a good look at it, to a guy that is maybe not as good a shooter. Even with that, we’d rather a guy that’s not a great shooter—unless it’s an absolute special situation—to get a cleaner look. Contested shots are hard to make. We do want ball movement and we love assists. We love the pass that leads to the assist. Yves (Pons) did a great job the other night when he passed the ball to VJ (Victor Bailey Jr.), Vj threw it back, and instead of shooting it, he put it on the floor with two dribbled and drove the ball and it was a terrific basketball play. We just want high percentage shots, and as many uncontested shots as we can get.”

On where he is during the COVID season whether it is at home, still at Pratt, or his office…
“I don’t spend more time at home. It’s different here. If you guys walked in our locker room it doesn’t look anything like it did a year ago. When the women aren’t playing here, we do most everything in the Ray Mears room. Most guys in the past might sit around and eat, and now most of them carry their food back, except the night before the game when we come back for our meeting prior to the game every night in Ray Mears. We don’t use our film room, so we haven’t been in our film room since we got back from Nashville back in the spring. All of our furniture was taken out of the lounge. When we’re in there, we have dividers up in the lockers and those type of things. We really do try to do everything we can that way. Today I’m here, then I walk through the locker room, and when we finish up I’ll go sit at the court at Thompson Boling Arena. We do go back and practice at Pratt, so we’re normally up there. Other than the way the locker room is set up, there’s not much that has changed in terms of the way I do things. I think our guys really miss the lounge, I do. It had become a home for them, where they would love to hang around and be together, and obviously we have encouraged them not to do that as much as possible. That’s the biggest difference, because my favorite time with them honestly is before practice and when we get started, or after practice when they are getting ready to eat, I’d hang out with them till the end. I loved being around them, and I’d get to cut up with them and kid with them, even If I had gotten on them in practice. That’s probably the biggest adjustment we’ve had to make with what goes on in our locker room.”

On freshman Olivier Nkamhoua’s Saturday performance, playing time and rotations going forward:
“Olivier did okay. I put him in and when I took him out, I said he took two shots and the first one wasn’t a very good shot and the second one I get it, but that’s not why I’m taking you out. We talked the night before and he said to me that his number one job was to play defense and rebound, and in that short span of missing those two shots, he gave up two baskets. Not easy ones, but he could have guarded better and he actually did when he went back in. We think that Olivier can score. I do think the more he’s out there, the more comfortable he will get mentally probably more than anything.

“I still think we’re going play 11 people going forward. We still have confidence in E.J. (Anosike) and Uros (Plavsic) and we want those guys to play. It’s hard to get beyond that 10 or 11 guys. It really is, because we’re still trying to get the consistency going. We had planned on really starting the younger guys a couple weeks back, but we couldn’t do it because of the injuries. We’ve been hit with that all year, and we want to get out there in practice and get that rhythm we want. This group of guys work hard, knowing that when their number is called, they’ll be ready for the opportunity they’ve been waiting on. We do want to keep the minutes down and in a perfect world, we like to keep everybody under 30 minutes in a game. We feel good about guys playing 28 minutes or somewhere in there. We think we’re all much more affective when we can do that, but for us to do that, we’ve got to get consistent play from our bench.”

On if success against Kansas was a product of shot selection:
“I think it has a lot to do with it. We talk about game shots and game speed, and that’s what we want to see. The other night, we felt like guys were a little bit calmer with the ball. I liked the fact that Yves Pons and Josiah-Jordan James got the ball down and got themselves in triple-threat position and raised up and shot it. I think that’s a great way to shoot a three, especially because I know how much time those guys have put in to doing just that. We all just want guys to do what they practice, and we want to come within the framework of our offense and feel like our guys know what we’re trying to get done. We did isolate a little bit more the other night, and we had some isolation plays that we went to that we like. It plays into those guys again doing what they practice.”

On the SEC defeating the Big 12 (5-4) and what kind of statement that was for the league:
“I think it’s important because everybody every year has their opinion. The narrative is that the Big 12 and Big 10 have the best leagues right now. I think the fact is that we did have an opportunity to go head-to-head and we came out on top. So yeah, I think it helps our league and the perception of our league. I also think that this time of year, it’s very important for teams that are fighting to get in to post-season play because every game is being closely watched. They always are, but maybe more so this year than ever because of the fact that some teams are not going to play as many games as others. I told someone after the game that all day long, I’d bump into people who were talking about the excitement of watching all these games on T.V. and that it felt like an NCAA Tournament because there are games going on all day long. They are terrific games obviously, so for our league, I think it was great and only the second time that I think we’ve been able to win the challenge.”

On the passing John Chaney and Coach’s memories of Chaney:
“It was a blessing to get to meet him and be able to be around him some and he was just a lovely person. He was always the same person every time I spoke with him and treated me very nice. The way I got to know him even more without him knowing that, was through Dan Leibovitch who is the associate commissioner of basketball in the SEC. Dan loved him and I would ask Dan about him and Dan said that if you were a student-athlete in Chaney’s program; it was all about getting an education. He drove that through his players and Dan told me that no one cared about his players wanting to create a better life for themselves more than John Chaney. We lost one of the best in the business. He came through during a time where there weren’t that many black coaches. Someone told me back in the day he was a public player of the year. He probably wasn’t recruited the way a player of that stature should have been but he made the best of it. You look at the legacy he left behind, he left the thing so much better than he found it and he’s so terrific for the game of college basketball.”

On his relationship with Kermit Davis:
“Kermit’s one of those guys the first time you meet him you feel like you’ve known him your whole life. He’s always had a pleasant personality with me and I’ve kept up with Kermit because ever since he got into coaching, everyone knew he was a terrific basketball coach. He did an incredible job at Middle Tennessee and there’s a lot of things about Kermit I like because he’s real. When he left Middle Tennessee, very few coaches would’ve said what he said. He came to Ole Miss and said this is a total rebuild. Most coaches wouldn’t want to say something like that and that tells you who he is, how secure he is and what he does. Everyone knows how good he is with the X’s and O’s and he’s done a good job at building programs and he’s doing the same thing with Ole Miss.”

On his first impression of Josh Heupel:
“I like him a lot. I met him in the football locker room the first day he was here and he was on the court the other night. Just spending a little time with him he’s a lot like Danny White. It takes me back to where I was at Providence or Clemson; they just want a chance where they want to come into a situation like this and make the program better. I like the fact that they think they’ve got a great job. They know what this place can be and they want to be a part of bringing this place back to be what we all want it to be. I can only speak from when I was at that age that you’re not afraid to compete. I think these guys are going to get us into the fight and that’s what we all want. Being around him and Danny, I’m impressed with their fire and enthusiasm on wanting to get things done.”

On wanting to get more out of Yves Pons and John Fulkerson and how they did that on Saturday night:
“We talked about drawing the line and it was directed at those guys quite a bit, to be honest with you. I thought both of them responded in a great way because of what we expected from them from the get-go. I thought they did exactly what we needed them to do. It goes back to having to do it again and again.

On why Tennessee outrebounded Kansas this year and not last year:
“For some reason, they didn’t send as many to the glass. Watching the tape, we had as many as five guys going up for the rebound sometimes. We told them the night before I don’t care who gets it, go get the ball. Santiago Vescovi had a great night on the glass and we had some good block-outs but nothing is perfect by any means. Our guards did a great job but they weren’t sending as many guys as they have before when we faced them but I don’t know. I just like the fact on a lot of clips, we had 5 guys around the basket ready to go get it.”

-UT Athletics

2020-2021 Lady Vols Basketball Schedule

2020-2021 Lady Vols Basketball Schedule

Here is Tennessee Lady Vols Basketball’s current 2020-2021 season schedule and results. Subject to change.

Date Time At Opponent Location Tournament Result

Nov 27 (Fri) 1:00 P.M. Home Florida A&M Knoxville, TN (Thompson-Boling Arena) Cancelled

Nov 28 (Sat) 2:00 P.M. Home Western Kentucky Knoxville, TN (Thompson-Boling Arena) W 87-47

Dec 1 (Tue) 7:00 P.M. Home ETSU Knoxville, TN (Thompson-Boling Arena) W 67-50

Dec 6 (Sun) 2:00 P.M. Away West Virginia Morgantown, WV L 73-79

Dec 10 (Thu) 7:00 P.M. Home Furman Knoxville, TN (Thompson-Boling Arena) W 90-53

Dec 13 (Sun) 5:00 P.M. Away Texas Austin, TX Postponed

Dec 17 (Thu) 4:00 P.M. Away Indiana Bloomington, IN W 66-58

Dec 20 (Sun) NOON Home UNCG Knoxville, TN (Thompson-Boling Arena) W 66-40

Dec 28 (Mon) 7:00 P.M. Home Lipscomb Knoxville, TN (Thompson-Boling Arena) W 77-52

Jan 7 (Thu) 6:30 P.M. Home Arkansas Knoxville, TN (Thompson-Boling Arena) W 88-73

Jan 10 (Sun) 2:00 P.M. Away LSU Baton Rouge, LA W 64-63

Jan 14 (Thu) 6:30 P.M. Home Georgia Knoxville, TN (Thompson-Boling Arena) L 66-67

Jan 17 (Sun) 3:00 P.M. Away Alabama Tuscaloosa, AL W 82-56

Jan 21 (Thu) 7:00 P.M. Home UConn Knoxville, TN (Thompson-Boling Arena) L 61-67

Jan 24 (Sun) 2:00 P.M. Home Kentucky Knoxville, TN (Thompson-Boling Arena) W 70-53

Jan 24 (Sun) 3:00 P.M. Away Vanderbilt Nashville, TN Cancelled

Jan 28 (Thu) 7:00 P.M. Home Ole Miss Knoxville, TN (Thompson-Boling Arena) W 68-67

Jan 31 (Sun) 2:00 P.M. Home Florida Knoxville, TN (Thompson-Boling Arena) W 79-65

Feb 4 (Thu) 8:00 P.M. Away Mississippi State Starkville, MS Cancelled

Feb 7 (Sun) 3:00 P.M. Away Texas A&M College Station, TX Cancelled

Feb 11 (Thu) 7:00 P.M. Away Kentucky Lexington, KY (Rupp Arena) L 71-56

Feb 14 (Sun) 2:00 P.M. Home Vanderbilt Knoxville, TN (Thompson-Boling Arena) Cancelled

Feb 14 (Sun) 3:00 P.M. Away Texas A&M College Station, TX L 80-70

Feb 16 (Tue) 8:00 P.M. Away Mississippi State Starkville, MS Cancelled

Feb 18 (Thu) 7:00 P.M. Home South Carolina Knoxville, TN (Thompson-Boling Arena) W 75-67

Feb 21 (Sun) NOON Away Georgia Athens, Ga. L 57-55

Feb 25 (Thu) 8:00 P.M. Away Missouri Columbia, MO W 78-73

Feb 28 (Sun) 2:00 P.M. Home Auburn Knoxville, TN (Thompson-Boling Arena W 88-54

Mar 5 (Fri) 8:15 PM SEC Tournament Quarterfinals vs. Ole Miss Neutral TBD Greenville, SC W 77-72

Mar 6 (Sat) 6:30 PM SEC Tournament Semifinals vs. South Carolina Neutral TBD Greenville, SC L 67-52

*NCAA Tournament TBD

Rennia Davis – Lady Vols / Credit: UT Athletics
2020-2021 Tennessee Basketball Schedule

2020-2021 Tennessee Basketball Schedule

Here is UT Men’s Basketball’s current 2020-2021 season schedule and results. Subject to change.

Date Time At Opponent Location Tournament Result

Nov 25 (Wed) 8 PM Home Charlotte Knoxville (Thompson-Boling Arena) Cancelled

Nov 27 (Fri) 6:30 PM Home VCU Knoxville (Thompson-Boling Arena) Cancelled

Dec 2 (Wed) 7 PM Neutral Gonzaga Indianapolis Cancelled

Dec 4 (Fri) 8 PM Away Notre Dame South Bend, Ind. Cancelled

Dec 8 (Tue) 6 PM Home Colorado Knoxville (Thompson-Boling Arena) W 56-47

Dec 9 (Wed) 7 PM Home UT Martin Knoxville (Thompson-Boling Arena) Cancelled

Dec 12 (Sat) 12:30 PM Home Cincinnati Knoxville (Thompson-Boling Arena) W 65-56

Dec 15 (Tue) 7 PM Home Appalachian State Knoxville (Thompson-Boling Arena) W 79-38

Dec 18 (Fri) 7 PM Home Tennessee Tech Knoxville (Thompson-Boling Arena) W 103-49

Dec 21 (Mon) 6 PM Home Saint Joseph’s Knoxville (Thompson-Boling Arena) W 102-66

Dec 23 (Wed) 5 PM Home USC Upstate Knoxville (Thompson-Boling Arena) W 80-60

Dec 30 (Wed) 9 PM Away Missouri Columbia, MO W 73-53

Jan 2 (Sat) 6 PM Home Alabama Knoxville (Thompson-Boling Arena) L 63-71

Jan 6 (Wed) 7 PM Home Arkansas Knoxville (Thompson-Boling Arena) W 79-74

Jan 9 (Sat) 2 PM Away Texas A&M Bryan-College Station, TX W 68-54

Jan 12 (Tue) 7 PM Away Vanderbilt Nashville, TN Postponed

Jan 16 (Sat) 6 PM Home Vanderbilt Knoxville (Thompson-Boling Arena) W 81-61

Jan 19 (Tue) 7 PM Away Florida Gainesville, FL L 49-75

Jan 23 (Sat) 8:30 PM Home Missouri Knoxville (Thompson-Boling Arena) L 64-73

Jan 26 (Tue) 7 PM Home Mississippi State Knoxville (Thompson-Boling Arena) W 56-53

Jan 30 (Sat) 6 PM Home Kansas Knoxville (Thompson-Boling Arena) W 80-61

Feb 2 (Tue) 7 PM Away Ole Miss Oxford, Miss L 50-52

Feb 6 (Sat) 8 PM Away Kentucky Lexington, KY W 82-71

Feb 10 (Wed) 8 PM Home Florida Knoxville (Thompson-Boling Arena) Cancelled

Feb 10 (Wed) 8 PM Home Georgia Knoxville (Thompson-Boling Arena) W 89-81

Feb 13 (Sat) 2 PM Away LSU Baton Rouge, LA L 78-65

Feb 16 (Wed) 9:00 PM Home South Carolina Knoxville (Thompson-Boling Arena) W 93-73

Feb 20 (Sat) 1 PM Home Kentucky Knoxville (Thompson-Boling Arena) L 70-55

Feb. 24 (Wed) 9 PM Away Vanderbilt Nashville, TN W 70-58

Feb 27 (Sat) Noon Away Auburn Auburn, AL L 77-72

Mar. 6 (Sun) Noon – Home Florida Knoxville (Thompson-Boling Arena) W 65-54

Mar 12 (Fri) 2pm SEC Tournament Quarterfinals vs. UF, TAM or SC Nashville (Bridgestone Arena)

Mar 13 (Sat) 1pm (if UT advances) SEC Tournament Semifinals vs. TBD Nashville (Bridgestone Arena)

Mar 14 (Sun) 1pm (if UT advances) SEC Tournament Championship vs. TBD Nashville (Bridgestone Arena)

John Fulkerson – Vols F / Credit: UT Athletics
Luke Bryan’s “Down To One” Video Is Available Now

Luke Bryan’s “Down To One” Video Is Available Now

Luke Bryan knew instantly that “Down To One” was a song he should record.

Luke says, “First time I heard it — it’s written by one of my dear friends Dallas Davidson who I’ve had a lot of success with as a co-writer with through the years — it just sounds like a big ole hit.” Dallas co-wrote it with Justin Ebach, and Kyle Fishman, and Luke felt like the track was meant for him from the start, ““Down To One’ is a real like typical song of mine that you kind of expect from me from the years…Guy and a girl out there, in the middle of nowhere enjoying a moment together, a romantic moment, and I always feel like you gotta have those on an album.”

Now that the video for “Down To One” has premiered, and fans can get an early jump on Luke’s summer anthem for 2021, as he says “A hot summer night like this never gets old.”

Check out Luke Bryan’s video for “Down To One” right here…

Photo courtesy of UMG Nashville

Luke Combs Releases a Song That Says What He’s Feeling – “The Great Divide”

Luke Combs Releases a Song That Says What He’s Feeling – “The Great Divide”

Luke Combs kicked off the new year with his song “Better Together” capturing the number-one spot on the country airplay charts for multiple weeks–including this week!

Now he’s announcing a new song — “The Great Divide”.

Luke shares the story behind the new track in a video he posted to social media…

With the video he included this message…
“New song “The Great Divide” with Billy Strings out now. Wrote it with my buddies Billy and Wyatt Durrette in June of last year. It was originally intended to be on a bluegrass album that I was working on, but that has been put on pause for now and album 3 is up next. However, I thought now was a good time to put this song out with everything that has been and is going on in the world. It isn’t meant to be political or try and tell you what to think or believe; that’s not my job. It’s just me saying how I felt when I wrote it and I wanted y’all to hear it. Since it was meant to be on my bluegrass album, it will sound a little different than what y’all are used to hearing from me, but would love for y’all to check it out and let me know what y’all think”

Check out Luke Combs’ new song “The Great Divide” right here…

Photo Credit: Zach Massey

 

Tenille Arts Looks Back On January 2021, and Hints About Future Music

Tenille Arts Looks Back On January 2021, and Hints About Future Music

Tenille Arts loves updating her fans with the events of her life on social media.

Now you can get 1 second glimpses at her life from this past month.

Along with this look-back video, Tenille hints that as she closes the book on January, there might be new music on the way, “Goodbye, January! It’s February…. which means I get to release a new song this month.”

Of course, fans are also loving Tenille Arts’ song “Somebody Like That”! It’s a Top 20 hit, and still climbing the country music airplay charts this week.

Check out a special acoustic version of the song here…

Photo Credit: Rachel Deeb

Three Vols Named Preseason All-Americans by Baseball America

Three Vols Named Preseason All-Americans by Baseball America

Jake Rucker, Max Ferguson & Jackson Leath (L to R) – UT Baseball / Credit: UT Athletics

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – Preseason honors continue to pile up for some of Tennessee’s top players as three Vols were named to the Baseball America Preseason All-America teams on Monday.

Max Ferguson was tabbed as a first-team selection at second base while fellow infielder Jake Rucker was named to the third team as a third baseman. Jackson Leath rounded out UT’s selections, making the second team as a relief pitcher.

Tennessee has now had four players named to preseason All-America teams this season, marking the second straight year the Vols have had multiple players earn preseason All-America honors. Prior to last season, that had not happened since 2009.

Monday’s recognition marks the third preseason All-America nod for Ferguson, who was also named a first-team selection by D1Baseball.com and a second-team pick by Perfect Game. These are the first preseason All-America honors for Leath and Rucker.

Ferguson ranked second in the SEC with nine stolen bases while batting .333, scoring 12 runs and hitting two homers in 13 games played during the shortened 2020 season. Entering his third season with the Vols, Ferguson has been tabbed one of the top 2021 MLB Draft prospects by D1Baseball.com (No. 24) and Baseball America (No. 48).

Leath was arguably the Vols’ most dominant pitcher last season while splitting time as a reliever and starter. In five appearances (two starts), the Texas native posted a perfect 4-0 record and 1.45 ERA. He also led the team with 29 strikeouts in 18.2 innings pitched. His four victories led the SEC and were tied for second most nationally while his 13.98 strikeouts per nine innings ranked sixth in the conference.

Rucker continued his maturation as one of the team’s top hitters during his shortened sophomore season. The Greenbrier, Tennessee, native started all 17 games and was on pace to set career highs in nearly every statistical category before the season was canceled. At season’s end, Rucker ranked fourth on the team with three homers and 13 RBI while batting .339. He also ranked second on the team with 36 total bases. Rucker was also surehanded as they come while playing primarily at the hot corner, committing just one error in 39 chances. Rucker checks in at No. 56 on Baseball America’s Top 2021 College MLB Draft Prospects List, as well.

Baseball America annually polls major league organizations’ scouting departments to vote on the team and asks that they make their selections based on performance, talent and professional potential. In the past, the Baseball America Preseason All-America team has been a predictor both of the first round of the draft and of team success.

Eleven members of the 2020 preseason first-team became first-round picks last June, including the first seven picks. In all, 16 of the 29 first-round picks were Preseason All-Americans.

View the full Baseball America Preseason All-America teams HERE.

The 19th-ranked Vols are set to open their season on Feb. 19 when they travel to Statesboro, Georgia for a weekend series against Georgia Southern. The 2021 schedule can be found by clicking HERE.

-UT Athletics

Jimmy’s blog: Kevin White discouraged son from becoming athletic director

Jimmy’s blog: Kevin White discouraged son from becoming athletic director

(This is the first in a two-part series on an interview with Kevin White, father of Tennessee’s new athletic director Danny White. You can hear the interview at 991thesportsanimal.com)

 By Jimmy Hyams

Kevin White has worked in athletic administration for 38 years.

An athletic director at Maine, Tulane, Arizona State, Notre Dame and Duke – he is retiring from Duke in August – White advised his five children not to follow in his footsteps.

Four ignored him.

“If Jane (Kevin’s wife) and I had encouraged them to come into this space,’’ Kevin White said in an exclusive interview with WNML radio, “we’d be 0-for-5 instead of 4-for-5.’’

Kevin wanted Mike and Danny to explore Wall Street and Brian to look beyond the education sector. He hoped Mariah would go to law school.

Mike is the men’s basketball coach at Florida, Danny the recently hired athletic director at Tennessee. Brian is athletic director at Florida Atlantic. Mariah is assistant athletic director at SMU.

Danny is a rising star in the profession, having great success at Buffalo and Central Florida before landing the Tennessee job.

“I could not be more proud of Danny,’’ said Kevin, “and quite frankly, I thought he did a brilliant job at UCF in Orlando. And my strong sense is he will bring that same degree of passion and intensity to the University of Tennessee.’’

Kevin White has high praise for Tennessee. As a high school track coach in the 1970s, Kevin brought his team to UT when the Vols track coach was Stan Huntsman. He was smitten with everything about UT.

“It was goose bumps for me just to be on that campus,’’ Kevin White said.

Danny White said Tennessee is still a great brand – it just needs some polishing.

Kevin White agrees.

“Tennessee is still Tennessee,’’ Kevin White said. “It’s one of those magical places. It’s a magical institution with a pinnacle level.

“It’s special, it’s incredibly special. And that’s why I’ve assigned the tag to it: Magical. It’s that and more.’’

It might take a magical effort by Danny White to restore a football brand that has been tarnished recently by eight losing season in 13 years — it had four in the previous 43 years. And in the past dozen years, Tennessee has had six football coaches and five athletic directors.

It has been a model of instability.

And it is currently conducting an in-house investigation into NCAA violations that were serious enough to fire third-year football coach Jeremy Pruitt.

Kevin White is confident his son can get the job done at Tennessee.

“I think he is the right guy at the right moment and, in my view, it’s a commensurate challenge with the kind of skills and aspirations that he brings to your community,’’ Kevin White said.

Asked the best advice he has given to his children, Kevin White said it was to allow them to “chart their own path,“ saying he and his wife have not been “helicopter parents.

“We’ve worked really hard to not drive them to a certain set of decisions. And we’ve tried to get them to think about things on their own and make their own choices.

“There’s a lot of areas where I wish I had done a lot of things differently and better, but that’s one thing I would say (I did well is) allowing them to be who they are, to be comfortable in their own skin, and quite frankly, to be authentic., and to follow their dreams.’’


Sponsored by Big Kahuna Wings: The wings that changed it all 

Dan + Shay Have Something New Coming this Friday, the 5th

Dan + Shay Have Something New Coming this Friday, the 5th

Fans are very curious to see what Dan + Shay are teasing on their socials.

On Sunday they posted their plus symbol with just the date “2.5.21” — we have four days until the reveal, but we’ll be keeping close watch to see if there’s any more clues dropped along the way leading up to Friday.

No matter what is on the way, the duo will be following up their very successful hit “I Should Probably Go To Bed”…

Photo Credit: Catherine Powell

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